Tag Archives: review

So, a bit more than a year ago I reviewed a sensational debut fantasy novel titled Blood Red Road by Moira Young. Fantastic read. I learned later that it had been movie-optioned by Blade Runner/Alien/Gladiator director Ridley Scott (can’t wait!!) and then she followed it with an equally pleasing sequel, Rebel Heart. Now, you’ve got to understand, I’m a lifelong lover of the fantasy genre – all the way back to the LOTR/Hobbit books and George MacDonald, then Shannara, Thomas Covenant, Pern, Guy Gavriel Kay, and on and on. Blood Red Road pushed all my best fantasy buttons.

Well, over the past year or so I’ve also been enthusiastically captivated by the off-the-wall humorous and weirdly creative literary style of fellow author Ellie Ann Soderstrom. (Here’s her blog, which will also give you links to her solo and collaborative works.) I subjectively 5-star reviewed (woot! woot!) her co-authored pulp crime thriller Breaking Steele back in January, and bottom line, this girl can wield a pen.

So, when Ellie Ann sent me an advance PDF copy of the dystopian fantasy novel she’d been working on for a few years and was finally excited to publish, I regrettably set it aside to read later. You see, my crazy-busy life just then welcomed zero interruptions for pleasure reading — Boo, Glenn!! Bad bad decision! – and I missed out for weeks on enjoying what turned out to be a sucked-in, couldn’t-put-it-down, two-day whirl-read of a literary gem. The Silver Sickle is fantastic!

You’ll find a bunch of 5-star reviews on Amazon.com and Ellie Ann notes many other raves on her website, and believe me, each and every approbation hits the nail on the head. Anything I say will simply echo everyone else, but I do wish to take a second to tell you what I loved about this book.

Imagine a world . . . Those of us who write contemporary fiction shudder at the thought of creating a brand new place. Environment, terrain, weather, inhabitants, politics, buildings, municipal infrastructure, cuisine, and on and on. Hell, I’ve literally lived my life in my books’ Seattle setting for more than 40 years. If I want to describe a building, I drive down the street and look at it! Ellie Ann has masterfully crafted her own imaginary land of Dyn, an intricately complicated world, roughly medieval Middle Eastern in flavor, but with a steampunk edge and a couple of wickedly cool and horrific alien races thrown into the mix. I got a fun Aliens meets Stargate meets Aladdin meets Falling Skies kinda vibe. (Hey, in my world that’s awesome!) And the whole Traveler thing totally creeped me out. Brilliant.

I need somebody to love . . . Talk to people about the last Oh Wow! book/movie/tv show/graphic novel/owner’s manual they experienced and at the root of their pleasure will be the characters. We want to escape with someone worthy of our heart-and-soul investment, and oh my, Silver Sickle has a bunch of ‘em.

• Our young heroine Farissa, unwillfully recruited into the “consecrated” ranks of King Koru’s concubines, but with a sassy bravery that just might set her free. (Think Jasmine à la Lara Croft.)

• Her childhood friend and devoted admirer Zel, a clever apprentice cogmaster who holds the key to that freedom by an impossible invention capable of destroying the godlike Amar. (Think Aladdin à la Sheldon Cooper.)

Once upon a time . . . And finally there’s the story itself. It goes a little like this: A mid-millennial culture is descended upon by a persuasively manipulative insectoid alien race called the Amar that convinces the kingdom’s handsome and gullible monarch to put the future of his people (and unknowingly the entire human race) in its exoskeletoned hands. A wicked bitch queen Gira heads up those Amar and she’s a total wicked bitch. Kinda like the head wicked bitch queen alien in Aliens. And she’s supposedly invincible. Well, except maybe by the robotic steel-armored cogsmen who’ve kept the kingdom functioning for centuries, but can’t truly protect its people because they’re bound to the will of their numb-nut ruler by brain chips that will trigger immediate self-explosion should they defy him by traitorous acts such as harming the Amar. Yeah, now you’re starting to get the picture. Luckily, the young consecrat Farissa and her lover wannabe and genius-with-the-cogs Zel stumble upon what’s really going on and make other plans. Until those plans are thwarted. Crap! So they make other plans. Oh, wait . . . TMI, right? I’m ruining the story. Okay, let me just say this: an adorable root-for couple with combined brains and clever brawn, god-awful hate ’em hate ’em hate ’em creepy bad guys, a mysterious mechanical army of potential save-the-dayers, a gargantuan basement-dwelling life-sucking amorphous worm thing called Traveler (yeah, the same name as Robert E. Lee’s valiant white steed – how twisted is that?!!), and a story that dances every which way and teases you along and keeps you guessing and smiling and sighing and hand-wringing and almost wetting your pants maybe one night late ‘cuz you probably shouldn’t have started that next chapter, but you couldn’t put it down. Just sayin’.

And the end is good, by the way, for those who worry about anticlimactic unfulfillment.

If you’re a fan of the genre, this one’s a fantasy winner. Can’t wait for what’s next up your sleeve, Ellie Ann.